Part, Chapter
1 I,I | the counting-room, and a pretty little sanctum for you.
2 I,I | a boudoir for you and a pretty chamber for Cesarine. The~
3 I,I | buying Les Tresorieres,~that pretty little property near Chinon,
4 I,I | years of age, fresh and pretty as you are, you can go and
5 I,I | and I will have to make a~pretty number of /neuvaines/ for
6 I,I | on the head of her~lover; pretty, isn't it? The safest speculations
7 I,II | the year 1800,~and in the pretty month of May, Mademoiselle
8 I,IV | lighted from above, with a pretty vestibule~opening from the
9 I,IV | address in one of those pretty note-books~which invariably
10 I,IV | dressing-room and~wearing a pretty morning-gown, fresh and
11 I,IV | Those conditions seem to me pretty fair," said Birotteau.~ ~"
12 I,V | awaited him.~ ~"Hey! that's pretty," he said to his daughter.~ ~"
13 I,V | both commercial men."~ ~"Pretty nearly, monsieur," said
14 I,V | and, as the old fellow is pretty clever, he gets rid of Anselme;
15 I,VII| yesterday."~ ~"She is very pretty," said Cesarine. "I liked
16 I,VII| fruits, to be served in pretty saucers, with gilt spoons,
17 I,VII| Persian chintz. A piano, a~pretty wardrobe with a mirror door,
18 I,VII| the good things and the pretty things~they had severally
19 I,III| green furbelows defined the pretty~waist, which had never looked
20 I,IV | him~"Rousseau's Dream,"--a pretty piece of music by Herold;
21 I,V | or--"~ ~She darted at a pretty inlaid box containing toilet
22 I,V | and caressing~her with the pretty kittenish grace which women
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